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The Maltese Falcon

The Maltese Falcon

List Price: $19.97
Your Price: $14.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It's the stuff that dreams are made of...
Review: Bogie, Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet- they were all in Casablanca together and made a great film, and here- it happened again! This is great FILM NOIR classic! The ending line, right off trhe bat, is just fabulous! Sam Spade is the quintessential private eye. When ever anyone thinks of a private detective, they think of a guy like Bogart in a trenchcoat and fedora...this is movie that started that! Film Noir and Bogie fans- this is an ideal film for you! Oh, and for thoes who aren't familiar with Film Noir, this is a great movie to begin with! Just SEE IT!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent
Review: Humphrey Bogart, Sidney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre form a powerful nucleus for this fine film. The ambitions and greed of a cast of eccentric characters are focused like a laser beam on the title object and its up to Sam Spade to sort out both the players and their Machiavellian plots and to dispense justice. Great dialogue and one tense confrontation after another make this a real winner.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: : )
Review: The stuff dreams made of

Pursued by Lorre, Greenstreet;

But Bogey saves day

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: One of the tightest stories ever put to the screen
Review: Bogart, Huston, and a superlative adaptation carried this film. To me, it was like watching a great soloist play a great concerto with a so-so orchestra. With the exception of Greenstreet and Lorre, the acting was pretty poor, especially Mary Astor's nauseating interpretation of Ms. O'Shaughnessy. Maybe they just look bad in comparison to Bogart, or their performances are just a tad unworthy to do justice to the amazingly intricate screenplay and the highly original cinematography - but this certainly didn't pose a problem in Casablanca. Also, the production values are surprisingly subpar for a studio film from the 40's. Still, despite its flaws, this film is certainly a must see.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The stuff that dreams are made of!
Review: This and Chinatown come to a tie when it comes to picking the best Film Noir or mystery film ever. Both have the same qualities and importance in film but The Maltese Falcon has some more good qualities. It defined the role of the hard boiled detective which Bogie truly brought to life. The Sam Spade detective still is the main character in which most mystery films try too imatate. Astor is masterful for her role as the femme fatale putting on her fake and innocent act while she was the one who set up Spade all along. Sidney Greenstreet was nominated for an academy award for his portrayal as "The Fat Man" who is obsessed with the falcon and all the riches that came with it. Peter Lorre also gives a memorable performance as Joel Cairo who's voice sounds very much like Ren Hoak and he gives the line "You fat bloated idiot!". Every other thing in this film has and will remain in film history.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: too much to wade through to get to the film
Review: This is a great movie! Leave it to Turner to fill 1/4 of the tape with stuff to fast forward through to get to the film. They treat a series of trailers like that's why I bought the tape.

My advice: buy DVD that you can program to get you straight to the film. My advice to Turner (and the Star Wars folks, who also do the same thing): put the extra stuff at the end of the tape for those who want it. Most people want to see the film, not the hype or history.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the few movies that's as good as the book
Review: John Huston's directorial debut nails every single possible angle for a great movie: a great hero in Humphrey Bogart's Sam Spade, here making a major transition from the gangster roles that made him famous; a great set of villains, from Sydney Greenstreet's ponderous Gutman to Peter Lorre's effeminate Joel Cairo to Elisha Cook's almost cartoonish gunman Wilmer; a great femme fatale in Mary Astor's Brigid O'Shaunessy; a great hunt, in the quest for the fabled Maltese Falcon. Shot scene for scene out of the novel (with some notable cuts of extraneous material, such as a long story Sam tells Brigid while they're waiting, and Gutman's daughter!), "The Maltese Falcon" is utterly clean, economical film-making with no fat whatsoever (except for Gutman, of course). The movie creates a tense atmosphere from its opening shots, with ironic humor simply acting as counterpoint throughout. The final scenes of revelation, where Sam explains to Brigid his personal code of honor, are as emotionally devastating today as they were fifty years ago. The last shots of the movie, as Brigid descends in the elevator quickly to her fate, while Sam takes the stairs, suggests each character is heading to their own private hell, even if at different speeds. A brilliant movie!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A True Classic
Review: This film is a true classic--great plot, great acting, great directing, great photography. It both apotheosizes and transcends the genre--thriller--as all masterworks inevitably do. If you like the films of John Huston or Bogie, this is your movie.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Definitive Private Detective film Noir
Review: What can I say? This is marvelous...John Houston and Humphrey Bogart are both given their first shots, (Bogart as lead, Houston as director) and all comes up gold. The first time I saw this, I was delightfully confused, now after several viewings, I realize that the "ride" is all that matters. Notice that something happens to Bogart after the first poorly acted scene in his office, I'd like to know what John Houston said to cause him to shine like the sun for the rest of the film. He acted like a man possesed. This is true film noir, it's a pity that too few films even come close to this masterpiece.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Potential for greatness
Review: This movie is very, very good. This is the first time I ever saw Bogart act, and although he is very good, he is no James Stewart. The camera work isn't that great, but maybe I've been spoiled by Hitchcock films. Sounds like I am being picky, and perhaps I am, but this is a Steward and Hitchcock fan writing this. Overall, I still highly recommend this movie and consider it a classic. I loved the ending.


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